On Mon, 20 Oct 1997, Travis Butler wrote:
want to go professional. Professional writers don't have the luxury of
waiting 'till inspiration strikes; to make the rent payment, they have to
keep writing, keep producing, without regard to 'mood.' And, in fact,
most of them say that going back a month or two later, they can't
objectively tell that the stuff they wrote feeling it was crap was any
worse than the stuff they wrote feeling it was gospel.
This depends. Kit (Katherine Kerr, the author of the 'Deverry' novels)
has told those of us who hang around in her writing forum numerous times
(as have many of the other professional writers who hang around in said
forum) that no matter how much time and effort she invests in a novel (not
always short stories, but almost invariably with novels), when she comes
back to the story after it's been published, she -always- finds things she
wants to change.
I think it's the same thing, but the fact is that whether you thought it
was 'crap' or 'gospel' when you wrote it, you'll find flaws and things you
wish you'd written differently after the fact. :)
Unlike fanfic authors, professional authors don't have the ability to
eaily revise their work and repost it, thought. :)
----[Loki]-----------------------------------------------------------------
Jeremy Blackman / Anime fan/fanfic author, Game Designer/Engineer
loki@maison-otaku.net (personal mail) / Maison Otaku Productions founder
loki@thekeep.org (mailing lists) / Fanfic author / anime
jeremy@lith.com (work) / Monolith Productions